Mar 2, 2015

Kashi Yatra- One evening on Harishchandra Ghat



Well, Kashi is city of very interesting things. People come here- to die, to perform rituals, to pray, to get married, to smoke, to experience and what not! One evening I was walking back from Asi ghat to Dashashwamedha ghat and was immersed in some thought. I was walking near the Harishchandra ghat and a big crowd screaming with excitement brought me back to the world! Curious I was went looking for the reason for that kind of excitement near a cremation ground. Yes! Harishchandra ghat is a cremation ground. (Read more about Varanasi Ghats here)


There was a burning pyre and there were people with sadness highlighting their faces. And right beside them was the crowd of 50-60 people cheering! Then I see a ram fight going on! Well, ram fight and so is betting. Two rams were dressed, one in black and another one in white for identification. Rams were ramming into each others heads. As the fight went fierce the screaming went louder. Cheering people moved with the fighting rams. Nobody seemed to care that they are in a cremation ground with a burning pyre. Nobody seemed to have sense of time and place. (More pictures of Varanasi here)


I asked one onlooker how could people behave like this in a cremation ground. He asked me what is wrong in that?! Kashi is a Great Cremation ground. There are burning pyres 24X7. People of Kashi cannot be sad and grumpy all the time, they deserve to have some fun! People of Kashi are happy for the ones who die and get cremated here on the ghats, because the dead are attaining moksha and directly going heaven! So, celebrate death! I got the answer to my long standing question- What is Rudramaya?

Rudra- a fierce form of Lord Shiva, the Hindu god of destruction. Maya- the illusion. Being in Kashi is considered to be soaked in the illusion of Rudra, where death is not sad but a celebration because at death the soul is absorbed into Rudra himself! The people who live in the city are considered fortunate for they are always immersed in that rudramaya. And people who visit these ghats feel the vastness of the sacred river, sense that something immense and start seeing the invisible and that is Rudramaya!

I too watched the fight for sometime. Initially took few pictures. It was very painful to watch when one of the rams became unstable, may be it had a broken skull?! But, the brave aries was still trying to stand without taking the defeat. Sun was sinking behind the ghats. I was thinking about the ram fight and people of Kashi all along the walk back to main ghat for Ganga Arti at 6:00PM. I will never forget the evening at Harishchandra Ghat. And that makes Kashi special.

Had you been to Kashi? How was your experience?
---

Leave a comment to share your beautiful thoughts and constructive feedback. If you have enjoyed this article then connect with Google+, Twitter, Facebook or subscribe through email for more exciting updates!

Related articles-
Omkareshwar- Where River NArmada meets River Kaveri
Amarkantak- the birth place of holy River Narmada
Backpacking India III- Classic Pilgrimage!
Backpacking India Part II- A Parallel Journey
Stories from Backpacking India

If you want pictures please ask me :)
---
Creative Commons License
Scrapbook- A Travel Blog by Kusum Sanu is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.

25 comments:

  1. We are so used to associating death to a sombre atmosphere, aren't we? :) For people to see cremations day in and days out, every death, every cremation is just another one.

    Interesting read.
    Nice knowing about Rudramaya.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That was an organised fight, wasn't it?

      Delete
    2. Of course it was! They are dressed for the event :)

      Delete
  2. Lovely read. Varanasi does throw up quirky stuff from nowhere.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you Niranjan! Yes, Varanasi is an expert in giving surprises.

      Delete
  3. India is so full of history, tradition, color and culture. It pays to read it from a local.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks! The more you see India more surprises wait for you!

      Delete
  4. two of my cousins are hari krishnas. So how come the rams are dressed up?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oh! They are dressed up for the fight the color code is for identification, betting is on!

      Delete
  5. Such contrasts of life!
    Well narrated.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Thank you for this very interesting post. different culture and different rituals , for us sometimes hard to understand. When I encountered my first cremation in India I was amazed about the almost festive mood. A visit to Varanasi is high on my list.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Visiting Varanasi is like opening up to the different world!

      Delete
  7. Great place for pictures - one day I'll get back to India. At present work keeps sending other people!

    Cheers - Stewart M - Melbourne

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Don't wait for the work to send you here.

      Delete
  8. An interesting post. I must admit, I am not a fan of animal fights - I don't understand how people can take pleasure in these animals' pain.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Definitely not a fan of animal fights anymore. But when we were young we used to go to rodeos, which are no better .... Very much a part of the culture in the western US where we grew up. But we've changed our thinking over the years.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes! It is a great thing to understand that animals feel pain too!

      Delete
  10. Very wonderful information can be found on web site,I have bookmarked it in my google bookmarks.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you Viswa. Glad you found this post informative!

      Delete

I would appreciate to have your precious thoughts, suggestions and kind encouraging words in comments. Please do not include self-promotional links.I am encountering some problems because of these links and hence I may not publish them.